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Oluwadamilola Akinboro Public Feed

Damilola Akinboro and Shaharaim Gill: Anatomy of a Scene - ARRIVAL

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro in Reel Reading · Pahomov/Wust · B Band on Wednesday, May 25, 2022 at 11:00 pm

Video: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1FQy7CeI3XqgC3rojmjXZ2nHwwHHFJU2w/view?usp=sharing

Damilola: Arrival is a sci-fi thriller movie that was released on November 11, 2016. It stars Amy Adams as Louise Banks who is leading “an elite team of investigators when gigantic spaceships touch down in 12 locations around the world. As nations teeter on the verge of global war, Banks and her crew must race against time to find a way to communicate with the extraterrestrial visitors.”

Damilola: Arrival is a fantastic film with beautiful cinematography and great acting, especially from Amy Adams. The direction by Denis Villeneuve is amazing in the way he’s able to convey the themes and meaning of the story and bring a unique perspective to the “alien invasion” sci-fi genre. Many critics agree too. Brian Tallerico wrote a review for rogerebert.com and said “- this is ambitious, accomplished filmmaking that deserves an audience. It’s a film that forces viewers to reconsider that which makes us truly human and the impact of grief on that timeline of existence. At its best, and largely through Adams’ performance, the film proposes that we’ve all had those days in which communication breaks down and fear over the unknown sets in. And it is the best of us who persevere, get up from being knocked down, and repair that which is broken.”

Shaharaim: Alissa Wilkinson wrote a review for Vox and said: “This is the basic insight of Arrival: That if we were to encounter a culture so radically different from our own that simple matters we take for granted as part of the world as it is were radically shifted, we could not simply gather data, sort out grammar, and make conclusions. We’d have to either absorb a different way of seeing, despite our fear, or risk everything.”

Damilola: There are so many scenes for us to show why this movie is great, but one significant scene we chose was this…

Shaharaim: From the beginning, it starts with this bass-heavy music score, which builds up a lot of tension and awe. Since this is the ‘first contact’ scene, the hype and anxiousness building up are done perfectly. The way that the spaceship’s mechanics are introduced feels natural to the story. Before they enter, you can hear people in the background talk about gravity changing in the rooms, and when you finally get a look at the ship and the gravity is actually changing, it adds a little more mystery to what these aliens are.

Damilola: As they walk through, we get close-up shots and eye-level shots of the characters to see their reactions and the fear and mix of emotions going through them. This helps the audience relate to the characters and have empathy for their situation. The editing and camera movements of the scene are slow to build tension. We feel unsure of what can happen at any moment just like the characters. The sound design is very simple and the music never feels overbearing. It doesn’t feel forced in, it just adds to the uneasy feeling. The scene uses very low lighting as there are a lot of shadows and dark areas with few sources of light until they reach their destination within the ship. Everything feels claustrophobic due to this and they use medium shots that feel like they don’t show everything.

Shaharaim: The optical illusions done in this movie are fascinating as well. When they start to enter the actual main entrance of the ship, you can see a bright white light. At first, it looks like the end of the long corridor, but as they go up higher, and the gravity is reversed, they soon find out that it is in fact the window separating the aliens from the humans. The white window pairs extremely nicely with the ultra-matte black of the room, as it provides the perfect contrast between the known and unknown.

Damilola: Very simple, effective, but breathtaking cinematography. The use of establishing and long shots in this film always feel very purposeful as they show us the scale of the situation and how small humans look compared to bigger things. Now that they are deep inside the ship, it’s time for them to communicate with the aliens. This is one of the most important parts of the film because it not only gets the plot going, but it also adds to the theme of communication and language that this film conveys. This is the scene where Amy Adams’s character tries to communicate with the alien. We aren’t shown anything. We don’t see how the alien looks since it appears to be behind a barrier filled with smoke. This again adds a suspenseful tone. We don’t know what can happen at any moment. The music starts getting louder and more intense. We hear very strange, unfamiliar sounds coming from the alien. Cuts to the human faces again to show their reactions. Then we see the alien’s hands but it looks to either be its shadow or just covered in ink? Without knowing the context of the movie, we don’t have much information. But that wasn’t the point of this particular scene. The point was to set the stakes of the situation and make us, the audience feel uneasy. The director and every department that helped craft this scene delivered.

Shaharaim: I’ve watched this scene multiple times, and I’m still impressed.

Damilola: Well that is the end of this short analysis. Thank you for watching.

END VIDEO.

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Damilola Akinboro Capstone - Celebrating Nigerian Culture Documentary

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro in CTE Senior Capstone · Spry/Ugworji/Ustaris · Wed on Wednesday, May 18, 2022 at 2:45 pm

My capstone project is a 15-minute documentary about some insight into Nigerian culture and traditions. It doesn’t cover every single aspect, but I tried to include as much as I could within the time frame. The process of this documentary started with planning what the running theme would be, who I should interview, and then the materials needed and where I would go. I also had to keep in mind of the scheduling. Then after filming each interview (which did not happen all at once) I had to begin editing which took weeks to finish. This was not easy, but I was eager to get it done since I’m very passionate about Nigerian culture and video/film production. This video focuses on Nigerian clothing, perspectives, food, and music.

Annotative Bibliography: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1YHfAtxqm3XZ8Dq—VKyXXI2eFihvGo9NEHBan_987Vo/edit?usp=sharing

Tags: year2022, capstone, Clapper
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Into the Heat - Metaphormosis//Episode 1

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro in College English · Pahomov/Wust · B Band on Friday, January 21, 2022 at 6:16 pm

In the first episode, we talk about Metaphormosis which was a quick but strange book. Link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/14NWEjmyvSsl0K9uzhXgrmim5HVJWHeol/view?usp=sharing

*this was also already submitted on canvas

English Podcast (2)
English Podcast (2)
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Into the Heat - Farenheit 451//Episode 2

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro in College English · Pahomov/Wust · B Band on Friday, January 21, 2022 at 6:10 pm

In episode 2, we talk about Fahrenheit 451 and the way the author sets up this dystopian society. Link:https://drive.google.com/file/d/13Igh93VNx_6Wc4QGs8cBBqfgFsGJr3f_/view?usp=sharing

*this was already submitted on canvas

English Podcast (2)
English Podcast (2)
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Into The Heat - Fahrenheit 451 // Episode 3

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro in College English · Pahomov/Wust · B Band on Wednesday, January 19, 2022 at 12:03 pm

In this week’s episode, Damilola, Dilon, and Shaharaim discuss the big ending to Fahrenheit 451. We also discuss what the author, Ray Bradbury’s, intention was for the meaning of the book, and how time changes people’s interpretation of any story. Here is the link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1LLe-3a34-Gt8XsiaOuS8H0rK3CHXM5tP/view?usp=sharing

English Podcast (2)
English Podcast (2)
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Emulating Your Author

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro in English 2 · Grzywinski · E Band on Friday, October 18, 2019 at 10:33 pm
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My Book Club, My Barrio

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro on Sunday, April 28, 2019 at 11:30 pm
Screenshot 2019-04-29 at 6.50.14 AM
Screenshot 2019-04-29 at 6.50.14 AM
​*Barrio means neighborhood in Spanish* 

Members of the podcast are Damilola Akinboro, Halle Griffin, Geonni Gee, Valeria Solorio-Arreola, and Kaya Armstrong. 

The book/memoir we read is When I Was Puerto Rican by Esmeralda Santiago. It's about Esmeralda who's called Negi going through life mainly Macún, Puerto Rico and other locations. Negi throughout the book changes as person as she grows and when see that journey from the beginning when she's a little girl to when she's in New York at age 13. 

In our podcast our objective was to focus on Negi's character development and explore the important themes and lessons put in this book. Two important themes we've discovered are self-identity and family. In this podcast we discuss the events that happen in the book how they affected Negi. We cover Negi's relationship with her parents and how they've changed through the book. We mostly talked about character for Negi because she's the protagonist and our objective was to talk about Negi and share our thoughts on her and if the message in the book was done right. 

Click on this link below to listen to our podcast. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NiqLjlObU8E&feature=youtu.be  
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Macbeth: Into The Modern Age

Posted by Oluwadamilola Akinboro in English 1 · Giknis · D Band on Wednesday, January 16, 2019 at 8:38 pm
I worked with Fudayl Hopkins. http://​scienceleadership.org/people/fhopkins22 

Project Links: https://docs.google.com/document/d/16Qheq6vClk77JWPIQ3n_ytvqnLnBo4Yt3SBVzhjitfs/edit?usp=sharing and https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1mfjr7-r1Fuh5dVV9RO_j0U6_XeTUQZ8DVEVMyoNsy5I/edit?usp=sharing

Our Macbeth creative project is about the both of us pretending we are filmmakers who want to pitch our idea for a PG-13 modernised adaptation of Macbeth. We chose the idea because we like movies and it’s interesting to come up with an idea for that and think of how The Tragic Story of Macbeth would have played out if it was released now which is the reason for our title, Macbeth: Into the Modern Age.
 The plot is how Macbeth works at a big company and he’s always wanted to be president of it. When 3 fortune tellers come and predict that he will become president of the company, with the help of his wife and his vaulting ambition he becomes convinced to kill President Duncan so he can become president automatically since no one else could president on short notice.
We chose only three important scenes from the play to adapt. There are choices that we changed from the play because it could never happen now like for example if Macduff just killed Macbeth he would go to jail. This project shows our understanding of the play because as long as you get the general message of the play across you can adapt Macbeth into anything. Even having the main cast animals in an animated film. Our script shows our understanding of the characters in how they would talk today and that was inspired from their personality. The real life actors we chose to play the characters also reflects our understanding of the characters. We like to think of our project still as the Tragic Story of Macbeth but it’s from a 2019 or 2020 perspective as if Macbeth was written in 2019 without changing the characters’ name or personalities.
Screenshot 2019-01-17 at 9.42.01 AM
Screenshot 2019-01-17 at 9.42.01 AM
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